Why Indian Travelers Are Buying More Travel Insurance Than Ever Before

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This is something that needs to be studies, Travel insurance sales among Indians are up 22% in 2026, with high-value cover doubling. Here’s exactly what’s driving the shift, and what it means for travel trade.

According to Policybazaar’s 2026 summer trends report, travel insurance policy sales among Indian travelers grew 22% year-on-year in 2026 as mentioned above, with the number of travelers buying cover above $250,000 almost doubling. Now despite all the geopolitical tensions and rising airfares, Indians aren’t cancelling trips, on the contrary they’re insuring them more heavily. Yet a huge 82% of Indian outbound travelers still skip travel protection altogether. Here’s what’s driving the shift, and what it signals for the travel trade.

For years, travel insurance in India has always been an afterthought, a checkbox ticked during visa applications or a small add-on most travelers barely registered while booking flights. That is changing rapidly, and the speed of the change is the story.

The Numbers Behind the Travel Insurance Shift

The scale of the change becomes even more clear when you look at how coverage levels have moved over just four years. Between 2022 and 2023, most Indian travelers typically opted for the basic cover of around $100,000. But during 2024–25, as post-pandemic awareness improved, coverage levels moved into the $100,000 to $250,000 range. In 2026, cover above $250,000 is increasingly becoming the standard. PwC

This isn’t a marginal shift, yet it represents a fundamental change in how Indian travelers think about risk. A traveler who, three years ago, might have considered $100,000 in medical cover more than sufficient is now actively choosing policies that are more than double that amount.

What’s being covered has changed too. Medical cover remains the most popular add-on, and has been chosen by roughly 75% of travelers. Trip cancellation protection is also the fastest-growing category, with nearly half of all travelers now opting for it, while evacuation cover is also following closely gaining traction amid global instability. PwC

The market-level data backs this up completely. The India travel insurance market is worth a whopping $1.29 billion in 2026 and growing at almost a 10.43% CAGR, and is on track to reach $2.12 billion by 2031. Various factors like resurgence in outbound leisure trips, mandatory insurance for visa issuance, and rising digital distribution have collectively pushed the India travel insurance market to the forefront of Asia-Pacific growth stories. Hospitality Net

Three Forces Driving the Travel Insurance Surge

1. Indians are travelling more than almost anyone else in the world.

According to Allianz Partners’ Global Travel Confidence Index 2026, Indians are among the most enthusiastic travelers in the world in 2026, with 87% planning a holiday this summer and well above the global average of 74%. More trips, by definition, means more exposure to the risks that insurance is designed to cover like flight cancellations, medical emergencies abroad, lost baggage, and trip disruptions. TravelPulse

Indian passport holders logged a staggering 15 million international departures in H1 2024 alone, successfully surpassing pre-pandemic baselines and reinforcing the upward trajectory of the India travel insurance market. Hospitality Net

2. The destinations and trip types Indians are choosing carry more risk.

The kind of travel Indians are doing has also changed drastically. Gone are the days of going for a holiday just to go to all the “tourist spots”. A significant majority of Indian travelers are now planning activity-packed, experiential holidays, 75% are likely to attend concerts, festivals, or performing arts events while travelling. Another 71% plan to attend sporting events. While 74% intend to pursue sports or hobbies during their holidays. And 74% are interested in cruises, expedition, or riverboat-style travel. businesswire

Now if you have observed, each of these trip types carries materially different risk profiles than a standard beach holiday. Adventure sports require specific activity riders. Cruise itineraries, particularly expedition cruises to remote regions, often mandate evacuation cover as a condition of boarding. And Festival and event-based travel, where non-refundable tickets are often the single largest trip expense, makes trip cancellation cover financially meaningful in a way it wasn’t for a generic package holiday before.

Policybazaar’s data shows a shift toward short-haul Asian destinations and an increase in solo travel, both trends that, as covered extensively in trade media this year, correlate strongly with higher insurance uptake. Another observation is that solo travelers, lacking a travel companion to manage an emergency on their behalf, are consistently the demographic most likely to purchase comprehensive cover. PwC

3. Geopolitical instability has made “what if” feel less hypothetical.

The past year has given Indian travelers and the world in general, repeated, visible reminders of how quickly travel plans can be disrupted by events entirely outside their control. Like airspace closures, flight cancellations affecting tens of thousands of passengers, and also sudden shifts in destination safety ratings.

International travel insurance adoption among Indian travelers rose 22% year-on-year in 2026, according to Policybazaar.com, as concerns around a number of things like medical emergencies, flight disruptions, geopolitical tensions, and evacuation risks increasingly shape overseas travel decisions. Travel Weekly

This is a meaningful psychological shift. Insurance has moved from being framed around personal risk of “what if I get sick”, to systemic risk, “what if the region I’m flying through becomes unstable while I’m mid-trip.” That reframing of perspective tends to produce exactly the kind of behavior the data shows: higher coverage limits, and broader categories of protection.

The Bigger Picture On Travel Insurance

The Indian market for international travel insurance has witnessed a steady upsurge, with the overseas travel insurance sector generating a gross premium income of Rs 1,267 crore in financial year 2024–25 alone, covering 9.67 million lives under a total of 2.79 million overseas travel insurance policies, according to IRDAI’s annual report. Lighthouse Intelligence

That’s nearly 2.8 million policies, and by Asego’s estimate, those policies account for roughly 18% of Indian outbound travelers. The other 82% travelled without protection. As outbound numbers continue to climb, 15 million international departures in H1 2024 alone, even the most modest improvements in that adoption rate translate into a very large absolute increase in policies, premium income, and digital engagement. Hospitality Net

India’s travel insurance story in 2026 is not really about insurance, but it’s about a country whose travelers are getting more sophisticated, knowledgeable, precautionary, more experience-driven, and more aware of risk, all at once. And yes, faster than most of the industry serving them has adjusted to.

The travelers are already moving. The question is which platforms, insurers, and destinations move with them.

Editorial Disclaimer: Data and statistics in this article are sourced from Policybazaar’s 2026 Summer Trends Report, Allianz Partners’ Global Travel Confidence Index 2026, Mordor Intelligence, IRDAI’s Annual Report, and BusinessToday/Business Standard reporting. Cover Page Media has not independently verified all figures. Readers should consult licensed insurance providers for product-specific advice.

At Cover Page Media, we bring you the latest trends in the global travel industry.

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